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Objects exhibit body model like shape distortions

Authors
Saulton, AurelieDodds, Trevor J.Buelthoff, Heinrich H.de la Rosa, Stephan
Issue Date
May-2015
Publisher
SPRINGER
Keywords
Body representation; Body schema; Position sense; Somatosensation
Citation
EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH, v.233, no.5, pp.1471 - 1479
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
EXPERIMENTAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume
233
Number
5
Start Page
1471
End Page
1479
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/93737
DOI
10.1007/s00221-015-4221-0
ISSN
0014-4819
Abstract
Accurate knowledge about size and shape of the body derived from somatosensation is important to locate one's own body in space. The internal representation of these body metrics (body model) has been assessed by contrasting the distortions of participants' body estimates across two types of tasks (localization task vs. template matching task). Here, we examined to which extent this contrast is linked to the human body. We compared participants' shape estimates of their own hand and non-corporeal objects (rake, post-it pad, CD-box) between a localization task and a template matching task. While most items were perceived accurately in the visual template matching task, they appeared to be distorted in the localization task. All items' distortions were characterized by larger length underestimation compared to width. This pattern of distortion was maintained across orientation for the rake item only, suggesting that the biases measured on the rake were bound to an item-centric reference frame. This was previously assumed to be the case only for the hand. Although similar results can be found between non-corporeal items and the hand, the hand appears significantly more distorted than other items in the localization task. Therefore, we conclude that the magnitude of the distortions measured in the localization task is specific to the hand. Our results are in line with the idea that the localization task for the hand measures contributions of both an implicit body model that is not utilized in landmark localization with objects and other factors that are common to objects and the hand.
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